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  • Research Handbook on Compliance in International Human Rights Law

    Research Handbook on Compliance in International Human Rights Law by Grote, Rainer; Morales Antoniazzi, Mariela; Paris, Davide;

    Series: Research Handbooks in Human Rights series;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 247.00
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    Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
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    Product details:

    • Publisher Edward Elgar Publishing
    • Date of Publication 26 October 2021

    • ISBN 9781788971119
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages576 pages
    • Size 244x169 mm
    • Weight 1104 g
    • Language English
    • 207

    Categories

    Long description:

    This comprehensive Research Handbook offers an in-depth examination of the most significant factors affecting compliance with international human rights law, which has emerged as one of the key problems in the efforts to promote effective protection of human rights. In particular, it examines the relationships between regional human rights courts and domestic actors and judiciaries.



    Taking an interdisciplinary approach, the Research Handbook explores the legal and political considerations that shape compliance, using a combination of both international and comparative law analysis in the assessment of regional human rights regimes. Chapters written by leading scholars and practitioners from around the globe cover a wide range of jurisdictions from Europe, Latin America and Africa and their interactions with regional human rights courts. The Research Handbook also discusses the limits of, and possible alternatives to, compliance as a framework for analysis, offering a fuller understanding of the effectiveness of international human rights law.



    Scholars, students and practitioners of public international law, international human rights law and comparative law will find this Research Handbook an invaluable resource. It will also benefit officials and lawyers working with international organisations who deal with human rights issues on a regular basis.



    This comprehensive Research Handbook offers an in-depth examination of the most significant factors affecting compliance with international human rights law, which has emerged as one of the key problems in the efforts to promote effective protection of human rights. In particular, it examines the relationships between regional human rights courts and domestic actors and judiciaries.

    ‘This Research Handbook offers a paradigmatic shift towards understanding compliance through the lenses of social impact. A precise and novel examination of forms of non-compliance and contested international human rights norms leads to a broader analytical framework on processes of transformation. In particular, the compelling comparative review of emerging interactions between the three international human rights courts offers an exceptional account of a dialogical international human rights protection. This book is a guide for future research and a renewed understanding of compliance.’

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    Table of Contents:

    Contents:

    Preface xiii
    List of abbreviations xiv
    1 Compliance in international human rights law: issues, concept, methodology 1
    Rainer Grote, Mariela Morales Antoniazzi and Davide Paris

    PART I EUROPE
    2 Securing the survival of the system: the legal and institutional
    architecture to supervise compliance with the ECtHR’s judgments 12
    Raffaela Kunz
    3 The ECHR as a constitutional rights catalogue: compliance in Austria 42
    Christina Binder and Philipp Janig
    4 Compliance in France: a ‘dialogue without words’ 58
    Laurence Burgorgue-Larsen
    5 Under the watchful eyes of the Federal Constitutional Court:
    compliance in Germany 75
    Nicola Wenzel
    6 The chances of observing human rights in an illiberal state: diagnosis of
    Hungary 95
    Eszter Polgári and Boldizsár Nagy
    7 Changing me softly? Actors, tools and techniques of international
    human rights compliance in Italy 121
    Giorgio Repetto
    8 Assessing Russia’s responses to judgments of the European Court of
    Human Rights: from (non)-compliance to defiance 136
    Ausra Padskocimaite
    9 The ‘indirect constitutionalization’ of international human rights law in Spain 183
    Encarna Carmona Cuenca and Sara Turturro Pérez de los Cobos
    10 Compliance in the UK in the ‘age of subsidiarity’ 202
    Alice Donald

    PART II LATIN AMERICA
    11 Compliance as transformation: the Inter-American System of Human
    Rights and its impact(s) 225
    Rene Urueña
    12 Argentina: strong linkage between IHRL and domestic law 248
    Laura Clérico and Celeste Novelli
    13 A multi-level process: compliance with international human rights law
    in Brazil 272
    Flávia Piovesan and Julia Cortez da Cunha Cruz
    14 Chile: compliance after ‘kind’ reminders 289
    Judith Schönsteiner and Marcela Zúñiga
    15 Compliance with international human rights obligations in Colombia:
    assessing the normative evolution and practical challenges 313
    Juana Acosta-López and Giovanny Vega-Barbosa
    16 Reparation without access to justice: the incomplete compliance with
    the judgments of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in Mexico 329
    Guillermo E. Estrada Adán and Patricia Cruz Marín
    17 Venezuela: from the structural non-compliance with judgments of
    the IACtHR to the denunciation of the ACHR and the OAS Charter
    (a pending matter for a future democratic state) 346
    Carlos Ayala Corao

    PART III AFRICA
    18 Forging a credible African system of human rights protection by
    overcoming state resistance and institutional weakness: compliance at
    a crossroads 362
    Frans Viljoen
    19 Compliance with international human rights decisions in Cameroon:
    mechanisms in place but a lack of transparency 391
    Debra Long
    20 A pick and pay approach: Burkina Faso’s compliance with international
    human rights law 407
    Kounkinè Augustin Somé

    PART IV THE UN HUMAN RIGHTS SYSTEM – THE CASE OF THE ICCPR
    21 Compliance monitoring under the International Covenant on Civil and
    Political Rights 425
    Anja Seibert-Fohr and Christine Weniger

    PART V CROSS-CUTTING ISSUES
    22 A dialogue with the deaf? The political branches as compliance partners 449
    Rainer Grote
    23 Judicial compliance in the regional human rights systems 465
    Davide Paris
    24 NGOs: A critical link to understanding and strengthening compliance of
    international decisions 484
    Mariela Morales Antoniazzi and Viviana Krsticevic
    25 Conclusion: moving beyond compliance without neglecting compliance
    in international human rights law 509
    Rainer Grote, Mariela Morales Antoniazzi and Davide Paris

    Index

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